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The Presidential Political Center and Foreign Policy: A Critique of the Revisionist and Bureaucratic-Political Orientations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 July 2011
Abstract
Fundamental to modern politics is the fact that politics of security and diplomacy are central to society. Historically, foreign and security politics have been the main priorities of the political center, conducted primarily on that level. Since 1945, these political centers have gained predominance in die U.S. In the absence of well-integrated political elites, a highly centralized political party or parties, and powerful and permanent bureaucracies and civil service, the presidential political center has become the pivotal political center with almost exclusive control over foreign affairs and national security. The locus and degree of power widiin the American political and constitutional context, rather than elite orientations and practices, are identified to explain who dominates American foreign policy.
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- Copyright © Trustees of Princeton University 1974
References
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4 Mills, C. Wright, The Power Elite (Oxford 1956Google Scholar). Mills was promptly challenged by a very specific group of social and political theorists, the pluralists. These were mainly professional political scientists and sociologists (inaccurately known as the “end-of-ideology” school). The pluralists, in turn, were challenged by the morality contingent, including professionals (political scientists and sociologists), but also by linguists, belle-lettrists, and journalists indignant about the slow process of social justice and an allegedly immoral war. Mills' disciples moved to restate the power-elite theory and applied it to the analyses of security and diplomacy.
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7 Keller, Suzanne, Beyond the Ruling Class (New York 1957Google Scholar), distinguishes between a ruling elite (the elective or political elite) and the strategic elite primarily concerned with administration and technocracy-the elite of merit.
8 Although the field of bureaucratic politics is as old as the seminal studies of Weber and Michels, the political science profession in the United States has its origins with students of public administration and government—Woodrow Wilson, Frank Goodnow, and Bernard Moses, to mention only a few. The new school of bureaucratic politics in political science mainly focuses on the politics and management of foreign affairs. Among the early political scientists and writers were Neustadt, Richard E. (Presidential Power: The Politics of Leadership, New York 1950Google Scholar) and Huntington, Samuel P. (The Common Defense, New York 1961Google Scholar). The field of arms control is dominated by political scientists influenced by modern theories of organization and economic management, such as Schelling, Thomas, Arms and Influence (New Haven 1966Google Scholar).
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23 I am in debt here to David Rapoport's perceptive analysis of the Federalists on executive power in its civil military context, “Praetorianism: Government without Consensus,” unpub. Ph.D. diss. (University of California, Berkeley 1958), 174.
24 Ibid., 175; emphasis added.
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31 Robert Bowie was a high official in the Eisenhower administration. Samuel Huntington was a Humphrey advisor (1968). Both were members of the Policy Planning Staff of the State Department. Henry Kissinger was President Nixon's National Security Advisor and Secretary of State, and was an advisor to Presidents Kennedy and Johnson. Edward S. Mason was a close advisor to Secretary McNamara. Thomas C. Schelling was also an advisor to Secretary McNamara.
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